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Jeffrey Riegel

Jeffrey Riegel is Professor of Classical Chinese Language in the Department of East Asian Languages, University of California at Berkeley. Professor Riegel teaches courses in Chinese Thought, Culture, Religion and Language, and he is coeditor of the Abstracts of Chinese Archaeology. Fluent in Chinese, he has served as consultant on archaeology and the culture of west China for the National Geographic Society and was part of the first National Geographic expedition to the western deserts of the People’s Republic. Professor Riegel has written books and articles on Chinese archaeology and philosophy, and is currently preparing a manuscript on the Chinese historical sources for Burma and Vietnam. He has traveled extensively in South and Southeast Asia has led tours throughout Southeast Asia and China for Archaeological Tours for the past ten years. The Annals of Lü Buwei, a book by Professor Riegel and the late John Knoblock, was published by Stanford University Press in 2001.

Keynote Address

'The Archaeology of the First Emperor's Tomb'

Now-famous pits containing a “Terracotta Army”—life-size clay figures that appear to replicate the actual army of the First Emperor—were discovered in 1974 in an area adjacent to the First Emperor’s burial mound. Discovery of these pits has made the First Emperor’s tomb the most important and well-known archaeological site in China. In the twenty years following their discovery, the pits have been partially excavated and the terracotta figures they contained restored and studied. While the original archaeological work at the site extended beyond these initial three pits, it is only in the last ten years that systematic surveys and excavations have taken place within the funerary park and its surrounding area. Thanks in part to ground-penetrating radar and other “hi-tech” methods, archaeologists have more recently discovered and unearthed pits that contain figures and other artifacts quite different from the “Terracotta Army” as well as gained insight into the “underground palace” that lies beneath the First Emperor’s burial mound.

Time and Date:

Wednesday 6 December 2006 from 9:30-10:30.